Filmmaker, who leaped to his death from the bridge, had used the site as a location for various projects and was planning to return to shoot a remake of "The Warriors"

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The Vincent Thomas Bridge in San Pedro was the site of Tony Scott's final, tragic farewell to the world.

But it also held special significance to the director and his projects.

In Memoriam

Scott, who leaped to his death from the bridge on Sunday, had used the site as a location for one of his films, and he was reportedly planning to return to shoot another.

According to the Los Angeles Times, in 2010 the director filmed scenes for the runaway-train thriller "Unstoppable" at a railroad yard just beneath the bridge. The film had marked his fifth collaboration with Denzel Washington, who had become the director's go-to leading man.

He was eventually angling to use the bridge, which was reportedly about 30 miles from his Beverly Hills house, as a location for his planned remake of "The Warriors."

In 2009, he told Rotten Tomatoes, "I'm hoping to get 100,000 real gang members standing on the Vincent Thomas Bridge for one shot. I've met them all: Crips, Bloods, The 18th Street Gang, The Vietnamese and so on. They all love The Warriors."

Meanwhile, in an interview with NBC News, Scott's friend and former colleague Julian Bray indicated that the director had suffered from depression "throughout his life," adding, "He managed to bottle it up and, unfortunately, it seems to have suddenly come out."

At the time of his death, Scott had reportedly been working with Tom Cruise on a sequel to their 1986 megahit "Top Gun," and the two had supposedly gone as far as visiting a Naval air station in Nevada to prep for the film.